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Lecture 9: Antitrust Policy

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Title: Lecture 9: Antitrust Policy


1
  • Lecture 9 Antitrust Policy Merger Analysis
    with Differentiated Products
  • An Overview
  • The Antitrust Framework.
  • Simulation analysis in mergers involving
    differentiated products
  • I. An Overview
  • In 1998, completed mergers and acquisitions
    totaled 1.273 trillion, a new record. This
    amount was 50 above 1997 levels.
  • Indeed, the merger wave of the 1980s peaked with
    completed mergers and acquisitions equivalent to
    10 of GDP, before falling to 3 in 1992. Since
    then, the merger/GDP ratio has risen steadily
    each year, reaching 22 of GDP in 1998.
  • Hence mergers are a significant part of economic
    activity.

2
  • The analysis of mergers using non-cooperative
    game theory seems very compelling. Yet up until
    the early 1980s, the dominant approach was based
    on the mergers likely effect on collusion in the
    market.
  • Now, the Antitrust division typically focuses on
    unilateral effects rather than the potential
    collusion effects.
  • Early work using game theory treated firms as
    Cournot competitors, and a merger between two
    firms was equivalent to one of the firms exiting
    the market. This approach has been criticized in
    recent years.
  • New merger analysis assumes differentiated
    products and models the firms as independently
    setting the prices of each of their brands. The
    typical assumption is that the merging firms
    continue to sell all products.

3
  • II. Mergers The Antitrust Framework
  • Mergers fall under section 7 of the Clayton Act
    and the general criterion for illegality is
    whether the effect of the merger would be to
    substantially lessen competition.
  • For at least 50 years, the U.S. Courts have
    favored a structural test to see whether such an
    outcome was likely, i.e., a test based on
    concentration and market shares.
  • By the 1960s mergers involving firms with small
    market shares were routinely being blocked by the
    courts.
  • Because of inconsistent (and overly
    interventionist) decisions, the U.S. Dept. of
    Justice tried to codify the practice of merger
    enforcement with the issuance of a series of
    merger guidelines beginning in 1968.
  • The first part of the guidelines involved
    concentration and safe harbors, based on measures
    of market concentration.

4
  • For example, the 1982 guidelines created safe
    harbors for mergers in markets with postmerger
    HHIs below 1000 and for mergers that increased
    the HHI by less than 50. Problem is that it was
    assumed that pre and post merger market shares
    would remain the same.
  • The 1982 guidelines introduced a major
    innovation in the methodology of market
    definition. A market is defined as a product or
    a group of products and a geographic area in
    which it is sold such that a hypothetical,
    profit-maximizing firm, not subject to price
    regulation, that was the only present and future
    seller of those products in that area would
    impose a small but significant and non-transitory
    increase in price above prevailing or likely
    future levels.
  • The purpose is to find a gap in the chain of
    substitute products.

5
  • The market that results from this test, is termed
    the relevant antitrust market and critical
    battles have been waged over this issue.
  • One problem with the guidelines is that the focus
    was typically on a static oligopoly, that is, the
    guidelines did not place too much emphasis on the
    possible impact of technological change.
  • Now, a requirement of the government as part of a
    consent order to a merger is that steps should be
    taken to maintain rivalry in innovation. This
    can be ensured via divestiture or licensing of a
    key proprietary technology.
  • The 1992 revision to the Merger Guidelines added
    a new focus on the role of entry. The guidelines
    require that entry be timely, likely and
    sufficient enough to counteract the competitive
    effects of concern.

6
  • There is a growing emphasis on efficiencies.
    Without efficiency gains from a merger, prices
    will likely increase. Synergies are often
    critical if a merger is to increase total
    surplus.
  • A 1997 revision to the guidelines states that the
    primary benefit of mergers to the economy is
    their potential to generate efficiencies. Only
    the efficiencies that cannot be achieved without
    mergers will be considered in the merger
    analysis.

7
  • So how does all of this work in practice?
  • Case Study Staples-Office Depot
  • In September 1996, Staples and Office Depot, the
    two largest office superstar chains announced an
    agreement to merge.
  • The FTC opposed the merger and presented one of
    the first cases to use modern economic and
    econometric analysis.
  • This case established the use of
    unilateral-effects analysis (as opposed to
    coordinated-effects analysis).
  • The case also confirmed that U.S. courts will
    primarily apply a price standard, that is, a
    contested merger will only be approved if the
    defendants can show that prices will not rise as
    a result of the merger.
  • There is a minor role for efficiency gains
    arising from a merger.

8
  • The Case in Detail
  • By the mid 1990s, there were only three effective
    competitors Staples, Office Depot, and Office
    Max.
  • Since these stores were not always in the same
    geographical market, larger cities consisted of
    monopolies, duopolies, and triopolies. (This
    variation was critical to enable the use of
    econometric analysis.)
  • The FTC experts first established that Office
    Superstores (OSSs) were the relevant market.
    This was a key step, because OSSs only accounted
    for 6 of total office supply sales.
  • Data obtained from the three firms indicated that
    they feared competition from the other two, but
    not traditional stores.
  • By comparing prices in monopoly, duopoly, and
    triopoly markets, FTC economists obtained a crude
    measure of the likely effect of both a
    hypothetical monopoly and the proposed merger
    itself.

9
  • The FTC also constructed an econometric model of
    the industry, including both large and small
    non-OSS. The model predicted that a merger to
    monopoly would raise prices by 8.49, more than
    needed for an antitrust market.
  • Once the relevant market had been established,
    the FTC used the econometric model to predict the
    effect of the proposed Staples-Office Depot
    merger.
  • The model predicted that the merger would
    increase prices by an average of 7.3 in in the
    two and three firm market cities where both firms
    were present.
  • The FCC also used an event study of stock market
    prices immediately preceding and following the
    proposed merger announcement to show that their
    econometric estimates were consistent with
    (stock) market expectations of the possible
    merger.

10
  • The FCC also demonstrated that barriers to entry
    were very high in the OSS market.
  • The defense claimed that efficiency gains
    (primarily from economies of scale) would cause
    prices to fall by 3.0 following a merger. (The
    defense also claimed that the gross price effect
    of a merger ignoring efficiencies was less than
    1. The FTC argued that economies of scale were
    nearly exhausted and that they would amount to
    less than 1.
  • The judge agreed with the FTC in almost every
    respect and the proposed merger was not approved.

11
III. The use of simulation analysis in mergers
involving differentiated products Economic
Analysis regarding the unilateral effects is more
amenable to quantification than is economic
analysis of the dangers of collusion. Ultimately,
we are trying to measure the added incentive to
raise price caused by the merger. Employing a
combination of game-theoretic and econometric
methods, we now have the capability to estimate
consumer demand using industry data, and based on
these demand estimates to derive specific
predictions regarding post merger prices. This
contrasts sharply with with the analysis of the
dangers of collusion. While we can easily list
the factors that facilitate collusion, there is
no accepted method of quantifying the increased
likelihood of collusion as a result of a merger.
12
  • In the mid 1990s, the Justice Department showed
    an interest in a completely new approach to
    conducting merger analysis.
  • Pioneered by Froeb and Werden, the simulation
    methodology using discrete choice models of
    product differentiation removes the need for
    defining a relevant antitrust market.
  • In the same way, market shares have no particular
    meaning.
  • While well focus on the methodology, it is
    important to keep the pitfalls in mind
  • One problem with this approach is that it may
    take decades before judges and antitrust lawyers
    become comfortable with the methodology.
  • It remains to be seen that this approach leads to
    better decisions that an approach based on market
    definition and market shares.

13
  • Methodology
  • Econometrically simulating the effects of
    differentiated product mergers involves four
    steps.
  • Make an assumption about the type of conduct
    (competition) in the industry. In most cases,
    Bertrand, or price competition is employed.
  • Econometrically estimate the relevant demand
    parameters. Here a specification needs to be
    chosen. (We will not do this now.)
  • Use the estimated demand parameters and
    information on prices and shares to get marginal
    cost estimates from first order conditions
  • Use demand and cost information to simulate the
    effect of a merger.

14
Estimating the Effects of a merger Suppose that
two firms merge in a four firm industry where
firms sell differentiated products (Step 1
Assume Bertrand competition.) Before merger ?i
(pi mci) qi , i1,4. After merger ?12 (p1
mc1) q1 (p2 mc2) q2 ?3(p3 mc3) q3 ?4
(p4 mc4) q4 Step 3 If we know the demand
function and have information on prices and
quantities, we can we can back out the marginal
costs using the before merger industry
structure. Step 4 Once we know marginal costs,
we can simulate the effect of a merger, by
solving for prices (and quantities) in after
merger industry structure. Hence, we have
estimated the effect of a merger.
15
Step 2 Estimating Demand Functions Following
Berry (1994) we employ a random utility model of
the form
  • xj vector of observable characteristics,
  • pj is the observed price of automobile j,
  • and ? mean valuations of the observable
    characteristics,
  • The last two terms of the above equation are
    error terms
  • ?j is the average value of product j's unobserved
    characteristics
  • ?ij represents the distribution of consumer
    preferences around this mean. (?ij introduces
    heterogeneity and its distribution determines the
    substitution patterns among products.)

16
Well assume that the are i.i.d extreme value
(Weibull) distribution function. This
(multinomial logit) model is popular because of a
closed form solution. The probabaility of
choosing product j is
(2)
17
Demand If we normalize the mean utility of the
outside good (k0) to be 0, and take logs of
equation (2), we obtain the demand function for
each product (3) Where s0 is the share
of the outside good. Equation (3) will be
estimated. This will yield estimates for ? and
?.
18
Oligopoly (Bertrand) price competition Let
pjprice of product j, qjquantity of product i,
The profits of a single product firm are ?j
(pj - mcj) qj FOC for profit maximization
imply qj (pj - mcj)? qj/? pj 0. For the
logit model, the FOCs are pj mcj 1/?(1-sj)?
pj 0 (4) Given pj,sj, and ?, marginal costs
can be estimated from (4).
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